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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1918)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JUNE 10, 191S. GERMANY MAP SHOWING NORTHERN ITALY AND SECTION WHERE AUSTRIANS HAVE LAUNCHED GREAT OFFENSIVE. 'THE STORE THA T UNDERSELLS BECA USE IT SELLS FOR CAS FT BY BOLSHEVISM Kaiser's Soldiers Back From Russia Spread Doctrines .v. of Revolution. REPRESSIVE ACTION TAKEN Berlin Believed to Be Preparing for Peace Offensive Allies Alert for Intrigue Crown Prince's ; Army Exhausted. ED LONDON. June 15. German soldiers returning from Kussia are Imbued with Bolshevik ideas and are everywhere circulating revolutionary pamphlets. General von Risberg said in the Ger man Reichstag during the Friday sit ting, according to a Copenhagen dis patch to the Exchange Telegraph Com pany. For this reason, he said, strict discipline was necessary in the army. The sitting was marked by sharp attacks by various members on the military authorities. rferr Mueller of Melnin,en. criticising the preference system in use in the army, declared that there were 3700 officers in Bucharest, where they are useless. He charged, it is said, that active officers are kept as far as pos sible behind the front, that reserve officers are used In the firing line and that volunteer officers are sent to the front without proper training or passing the necessary examinations. Von Stein RebakfR Expoian, General von Stein, the Prussian War Minister, made a violent attack upon Herr Mueller for his revelation of con ditions in the army. PARIS, June 15Havas Agency.) Berlin has not abandoned hope of ob taining a "good" German peace soon. The press is following with curiosity and interest the preparations for a peace offensive, which seem to be clearly outlined and about to pass from the newspaper domain into official circles. The Petit Journal, voicing the unani mous opinion of its colleagues, de clares that German intrigue will fall before the unshakable will of thi allies. The only possible peace for them is a peace of justice and civiliza tion, it says. evr Attacks Expected. The lull along the front of the Ger man offensive is considered merely a period of preparation for new attacks. The six days of terrible fighting east of Montdidler realized mediocre gains and the Petit Parisisne says that the German check gives a good reason for confidence, as the allied armies are In creasing continuously. It is pointed out that the army of the German Crown Prince is exhausted and it is believed that Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria, whose reserves are far from being equal to those under Ills command on March 21. will nroha- bly resume action on his portion of the iront. LOGGERS MEET JUNE 22 PROBLEMS . AFFECTIXG WORKERS TO HAVE CONSIDERATION-. Formal Creation of Inland Empire Division of Loral I.rrlon "Will lie Completed at Spokane. Representatives of the 20,000 Loyal Legion of Loggers ami Lumbermen of the Inland Empire are to meet with Colonel Brlce P. Disque, commander of the spruce-production division of the t-'nited States Signal Corps, in a con ference similar to that held in Port land early this year. Adjustment of wages, hours, work ing conditions and all other problems effecting the men will bo made at the session, to be held in Spokane, June 22. The call for the meeting was sent out yesterday from Colonel Disque's office. Formal creation of the Inland Em pire division of the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen will be com pleted at the Spokane meeting. Be cause of the fact that the aircraft pro duction programme has been enlarged to include pine and fir, activities in the Spokane district are being extended, Rnd the loggers' organization Is grow ing rapidly. Organizations west of the Cascades are grouped in the coast di vision. Colonel Disque has also called a meeting of all operators of the Spo kane district, to be held In that city on June 27. Yri v s VrfVEMICE .vC Heavy Black Line Indicates Present Battle Line Vpon Which. Extending; From AbIsko on the Weat to the Adriatic Sear .North of Venice, the Dnal Monarchy's Forces Have Attacked. Arrows Indicate Greatest Pressure Against Italian Lines. Regular Broken Line Generally Following Italian Northern Boundary Indicates Italy's Farthest Advance. FIRES DEFY CONTROL High Winds Fan Blazing For ests in Montana. THOUSAND FIGHT FLAMES W. L. T00ZE, SR., CHAIRMAN Marion County Republican Commit tee, Chooses Leader. SALEM. Or., June 15. (Special.) Walter L. Tooze, Sr., today was elected chairman of the Republican Central Committee for Marion County to suc ceed Ben F. Robertson, of Turner. N. J. Elliott," of Salem, was re-elected sec retary. Ben F. West, also of Salem, was named state committeeman, suc ceeding Frank Davey. and W. J. Cul ver, of this city. Congressional commit teeman to succeed himself in a place he has held for years. , The executive committee was select ccl as follows: J. P. Morcom. Wood burn; S. t. Porter, Aumsville; A. L. Lawrence, Salem; S. J.' Culver, Salem; S. E.- Brown, Silverton; W. H. Hobson. Stayton: H. R. Peets, Turner; W. L. Tooze, Sr., and N. D. Elliott, Salem. Rain Improves Situation in Some Localities, but Helena and Kaniksu Districts Are Still In Peril. MISSOULA, Mont., June 15. Fires on the Helena and Kaniksu National For ests have been Tanned to dangerous fury by high winds prevailing during the past 24 hours, according to re ports received here today at headquar ters of District No. 1 of the United States Forest Service. In other sections rain has helped the emergency fighting forces, and the sit uation is improved. In the Kaniksu forest, which lies in Washington and Idaho, a serious fire on Pine Creek has reached green tim ber, where it may be checked. The Leclerq fire In the same forest has been surrounded by fire lines which the field forces are trying to hold. In the Helena forest Federal and state forces are working with little success against a spreading fire on Beaver Creek. A thousand men are now fighting fire in this district, it was reported today. HELENA. Mont.. June 15. The for est fire in the Bear Tooth country, north of Helena, is growing in seri ousness. C. L. Billings, district forest officer at Missoula, arrived here to day to take charge of the fight against the flames, and has a crew of 25 men at work. It is estimated that 300 acres have been burned over and the fire is spreading. The origin is unknown. The only other fire In this neighbor hood is east of Canyon Ferry. It 1 under control. and to a maximum depth of 1000 yards. He has been firmly held here all day. "The enemy suffered the heaviest losses. "Flying has been impossible for sev eral days, owing to the weather. Today was unsuitable for flying, except very early in the" morning, when seven hos tile machines were destroyed and two balloons were sent to earth in flames. "Our flying squadron in the after noon continually engaged in machine- gun attacks on marching columns and bombed enemy bridge and transports on the lower Plave, doing great dam age at low altitudes." The last great Austro-German offen sive began in October, 1917, rolled back General Cadorna's line from tho Isonzo front and along the Venetian plain. More than a million enemy troops par ticipated in this operation and it was not for many weeks that the Italians were able to stay the advance. About the middle of November the Piave battle began along a .90-mile front in Northern Italy and French and British troops were hurried to reinforce the shaken Italian army. The crisis was passed about the first of Decem ber and since that time there has been heavy fighting in which the Italians and their allies carried out many suc cessful counter attacks. There have been insistent cries from Germany for Austrian action along the Italian front to co-ordinate with the German offensive in the western lone and for months past the Italians have been preparing for just such a blow as apparently is now being struck. The Italian army has been re-equipped and General Diaz has succeeded General Ca dorna as the commander-in-chief. The present battle line extends from Asiago to the sea. ITALIAN ARMY HEADQUARTERS. June 14. The attempted surprise at tack by the Austrians in the Tonale region today was decisively repulsed by the Italians with artillery and ma chine-gun fire and bayonet charges. The frequent encounters were spir ited, notwithstanding the cold and the blinding darkness of the night. This action was an aftermath of the one three weeks ago when the Italians took the Paradiso Pass for the purpose of protecting Val Ca.moniu& and the Oglio River and the westernmost entrance to the Italian plains. OLD OFFENDER IN TOILS CHARLIE JONES IS C II Rt.KD WITH LKtl'OR VIOLATION. Officers Locate Cache and Confiscate Large Quantity of Whisky. Ball Fixed at S1AOO. Charlie Jones, an old offender, was arrested by Officers Phillips and Tee tera of the war emergency squad last night for the fourth time, at Fourth and Market streets, and lodged in th city jail charged with violation of the prohibition law. His bond was fixed at 1000. One suitcase containing 14-plnt ilasks of whisky and one full quart bottle were found in his apartments at 269 Market street by the officers, and taken to the station. Two tool chests and a trunk were found by the officers concealed under a pile of hay in a barn in Alblna. One chest contained 150 small flasks hold ing three fingers of whisky. Several jugs filled with liquor and jars were found in the trunk. A complete out fit for bottling the whisky was also discovered in the barn. The officers trailed Jones all day to find where the cache was located. All the liquor and trunks were taken to the station to be used as evidence. This is tho fourth offense for Jones, say the officers. He was convicted short time ago by a Jury for the third time, and was at liberty on a $500 bond on the third conviction, which he appealed when arrested. THREE-YEAR CRUISE ENDS Magnetic Observation Yacht Carne gie Returns to Washington. WASHINGTON, June 15. The mag netic observation yacht Carnegie has arrived here after a, three years' cruise, closing her voyage with a run up the coast as near In-shore as possible to keep out of the way of German sub marines. Valuable data on terrestrial magnetism was obtained by the scien tists. The Carnegie left Brooklyn three years ago with six scientists aboard, passed through the Panama Canal and then cruised about in the North and South Pacific from the Arctic to the Antarctic circles. The homeward voy age was made around Cape Horn, up the Pacific and through the Panama Canal. PARIS BOLSTERS DEFENSES General Guillaumat Arrives to Pre pare Safeguards to City. PARIS, June 15. General Guillaumat, who' has been transferred from the post of commander-in-chief of the allied operations in the Balkans to that of military governor in Paris, in succes sion to General Dubail, has arrived here from Saloniki and has taken up his new duties the preparation of the defenses of Paris in co-operation with the newly organized defense committee. These defensive measures. Premier Clemenceau explained to a deputation of the Radical party today, are of a precautionary nature for the safe guarding of the capital. GERMANY IS TOO EXACTING Hitch Occurs in Xegotiatlons for Ex change of Prisoners. LONDON. June 15. Because the Ger man delegates at the British-German war prisoners' conference at The Hague were pressing for the return . of all prisoners in Canada and Africa aa well as those in Great Britain, a hitch has occurred in the negotiations, telegraphs the correspondent at the Dutch capital of the Times. The difficulties of such a course, it is contended by the British delegates, particularly in respect of shipping transport, make it impracticable. The negotiations have now reached a most critical stage, but tho correspondent says there is no reason to think they will prove abortive. B0PP RESIDENCE ATTACHED Property Seized to Settle Federal Fine of 910,000. OAKLAND. Cal.. June 15. Residence property here owned by Frans Bopp. former German Consul at San Fran cisco and now serving a term in the Federal Penitentiary at McNeil's Island. Wash., for violation of Ameri can neutrality, was attached by the Federal Government today In a move to collect the fine of 110,000 imposed on Bbpp in addition to hia penal term of two years. John Twohy. senior member of Two hy Brothers Company, contractors, is registered at the Portland from Spo kane. Wash. Mr. Twohy Is interested in the Old National Bank of Spokane, also in the Northwestern Nationa Bank in this city. He Is one of the largest operators on the Pacific Coast, Oregonian want ads are producers. Whisky Brought in Dining Car. Twenty-seven full pints of whisky were found concealed in the lien room In the dining-car of Southern Pacific train No. 64 by officers of the war emergency squad when the train ar rived from the south yesterday morn ing. C. B. Winford, a colored waiter who had the key to the lien room, was arrested and charged with violation of the prohibition law. AUSTRIANS START DRIVE (Continued From First Page.) Snyder Gets V. S. Position. WASHINGTON, June 15. Edgar ' C. Snyder, of Seattle, was appointed today a Federal employment director for Washington, Oregon and Idaho, suc ceeding Henry M. White. Commissioner of Immigration and Conciliation at .Seattle, who has been acting employ ment director. sity on many sectors of the southwest front early this morning. "On the Albanian front new French attacks, which were carried out yes terday northwest of Sinaprente, broke down." LONDON. June 15. The War Office tonight issued the following statement concerning operations of the British army in Italy: "A heavy bombardment by Austrian guns opened along the entire front from the sea to the Adige at 3 o'clock this morning followed by infantry as sault throughout the day. Four Aus trlan divisions attacked the British forces. "On the right the attack failed com pletely. the. enemy losing heavily. On the left the enemy penetrated our front line on a width of 2500 yards, yip.. - Dr.B.L.Wnjbt ARTIFICIAL TEETH WELL MADE AND FITTED AREA BOON compared with old, decayed stumps. Where a few teeth are missing, one of my scientifically constructed bridges will give perfect satisfac tion. When you have no sound teeth on which to attach a bridge, I can supply perfect-fitting plates that will look well and chew your food thoroughly without causing discom fort or annoyance. Skill will tell. Palnles Extraction of Teeth. 20 Years Active Practice. Dr. B. E. Wright Northwest Corner of Sixth and Washington. Raleigh Building. Phones t Main 2119, A 2119. Office Hours t 8 A. M. to 8i30 P. Consultation Free. M. UKULELES 82.25 AND rP. FREE LESSONS McDougall Music Co. 335 ALDER ST XEAlt BROADWAY. THOMPSON'S Deep Carve Lsnsoa An Better (Trademark Registered) THE SIGN OF PERFECT SERVICE Eyes carefully examined and properly fitted with glasses without the use of drags, by skilled specialists. - Why Shur-Ons and Kryptoks? If In view of the fact that so many advise SHUR-ONS and KRYPTOKS. there must be a reason for our personal recom mendation of these well-known aids to vision. ft Chief among these reasons is our added experience and ability in adjusting SHUR-ONS. 11 Their efficiency may be ruined in the hands of those not skilled in making and placing them properly before your eyes. II Making Kryptoks' as they should be made is a careful, delicate and conscientious work. U All this and a vast experience make the KRYPTOKS we make for you the best obtainable in double-vision lenses. Complete Lens Grinding Factory on the Premises SAVE YOUR EYES j THOMPSON OPTICAL INSTITUTE Portland's Largest, Most Mod ern and Best Equipped Exclusive Optical Establishment 209-10-11 CORBETT BLDG. FIFTH AND MORRISON SINCE 1908 I Another Great Underpriced Attraction in The Most Beautiful High- Grade $1.59 Silks Thousands of Yards. Hundreds of Clever Color Combinations and the Most Fashionable Plain Shades The Most Popular U eaves in Endless Variety; 36 to 40-Inch Widths Priced for This Sale at About One Half Regular Selling Figures You Have Choice From the Entire Assortment Monday at, the yard SEE OUR MORRISON-STREET WINDOW Lovely, indeed, are these Silks. Included are: Tussah Pongees. 36-in.. Popular Sport Colors Shan-Tung Pongees, 36-inch, Extra Heavy Quality Crepe.de Chines, 40-inch, New Novelty Pat terns Warp Print Silks, .Ifi-inch, Beautiful Color Combinations Cheney Bros.' 40-inch Foulard Silks Crepe de Chines, 40-inch, All Wanted Colors Swiss Taffetas, 36-in., Complete Color Range Crepe Meteors, 40-in Shown in Many Colors Brocade Satins, 40-inch, All the Best Colors Dress Satins, 40-inch, Staple and New Shades Also high-class Taffetas with satin and jacquxrd over-designs all new rich color com binations. They are just such silks as. every woman would be pleased to purchase the kind that fashion has favored for this and the coming season. There are so many different weaves, styles and colorings that you will have to see them to leam just how beautiful they are and how greatly they have leen underpriced for this saU You will secure supreme Silk satisfaction at SI. 59 YARD Extra Salespeople, Cashiers and Wrappers will be in attendance to serve you promptly and courteously. 5c a Yard Lot One On Sale at Included are French, Zion and Round Thread Vals., Imitation Filets, Torchons, Headings, Bands, Edges, etc., Vz up to 3V-inch widths. 15c a Yard Lot Three Priced at. . . . This assortment consists of narrow Filet and Flat Venise Edges and Sets, Imitation Cluny Bands and Edges in white and ecru. All new goods. 10c a Yard A Complete Stock of the Celebrated Jantzen Knit Bathing Suits and Sweaters for Men and Women Arozc on Display In Our New Knit Underwear Section Main Floor Store Opens at 8 -.30 A.M. Saturdays at 9 A.M. The Most in Value The Best in Quality Store Closes at 5:30 P.M. Saturdays at 6 P. lM. V.- : ' IsJ.' J ' - ' -'. 4 We take pleasure In announcing that Earl Gray's Majestic Jaxx Band will In the near future be auptmentd hy Mr. Jack Toves. xylo phone artist, of Vancouver, B. C. Watch for hia arrival. REMEMBER A Cool Place for Lunch, Dinner and After-Theater Dancing. Every Weekday, 6:15, 8:15 and 9:30-12 Try Our Special Sunday Dinner 75 THE CHINA INN An Extensive Showing of Popular NewLaces for Summer Garments Sec Our Corner Window Display Widths. Qualities and Patterns to Suit Every Taste and Purpose You Have Four Great Lots to Select From, Priced as Follows: L.ot Two On Sale at An extensive variety of patterns in Imitation Filet, Cluny, Normandie Vals., etc.. Bands and Edges in widths from 2 to 4 inches. 25c a Yard Lot Four Priced at. . . . Choice from Camisole Laces, Imitation Crochet and Filet Edges and Bands, 12-inch Rourtd Thread Val. Skirtings, 18 to 27-inch j Flouncings, 36-inch Shadow Allovers, etc. Tells Impoverished Men and Women How to Become Healthy, Strong, Energetic, Magnetic and Vigorous. Broadway Bldg. 153 Broadway Phone your Want Ads to THE OREGONIAN. Main 7070 A 6095 J Three-Grain Cadomene Tablets J Advised for Their Wonder- ful Tonic Properties. 2 Don't envy the man or woman with abunrlant enerpy. vitality and the ever preoent smile of cordial, magnetic per sonality. IteHolve to banish your lan guor, your tired, worn-out feellnc. your arhi-s and pains, your mental worry and distress, hy supplylne your system with plenty of Iron, phosphorus and vege table tonics so that every Oman of your body can perform Its normal functions from the vigorous blood supply that courses through your arteries. Tone tip the liver, stomach, kidneys and bow els, diirest your food better and supply your nerves with the vital elements lit Cadomene Tablets, and you won't need to envy anyone. Just Bet your body and nerves working right and nature will help you do the rest. Cadomene Tablets are sold In sealed tubes by all Rood druggists and are guaranteed tv pleas you or money back. For sale by the Owl Ituk Co. stores and all other druggists. Adv.